Apple is building its most expensive iPhone ever, and it won't unlock with your face.

The iPhone Ultra, Apple's firstfoldable smartphoneexpected in September 2026, will start at $1,999 (£1,478) and ship without Face ID, a telephoto camera, or a physical SIM slot. At nearly double the price of a standard Pro model, the foldable carries a striking set of trade-offs that every buyer on an upgrade cycle should understand before putting down a deposit.

The Ultra's chassis measures just 4.5mm when unfolded, making itApple's thinnest iPhoneby a wide margin. That slimness can't accommodate the TrueDepth camera array required for Face ID. Apple will instead use a Touch ID sensor built into the power button, similar to the iPad Air.

While budget models like the iPhone SE kept the fingerprint sensor around for years, the premium iPhone flagships completely abandoned the technology after 2017's iPhone 8 series.

For the first time in exactly ten years, Apple's absolute highest-priced, top-tier device will rely on a fingerprint to unlock.

The foldable will carry two rear cameras, both 48MP wide and ultrawide sensors, with no telephoto lens for optical zoom. Apple's US imaging team reportedly tested telephoto capabilities on rival foldables from Huawei and Samsung, but couldn't fit the hardware into the Ultra's thin frame. Buyers hoping to zoom in on distant subjects will have to rely strictly on digital cropping.

What made the cut wasCamera Control, the dedicated shutter button first introduced on the iPhone 16. According to leaker 'Instant Digital' on Weibo, Apple made deliberate engineering compromises to include the button, believing it solves the 'cumbersome' one-handed photo experience on large foldable screens. To fit Camera Control, Apple dropped the physical SIM slot entirely and adopted eSIM-only connectivity across all regions.

The iPhone Ultra will launch in just two finishes. A Macworld supply chain source identified the options as a silver and white model and an indigo shade similar to the iPhone 17 Pro's Deep Blue.

Supply chain analyst Ming-Chi Kuo has warned thatearly-stage yield and ramp-up challengescould lead to shortages through the end of 2026, with smooth shipments unlikely before 2027. Kuo noted that Apple's widely reported component order of 15 to 20 million units actually covers the device's full two-to-three-year lifecycle, not a single launch year. Recent supply chain adjustments suggest first-year production will scale down, targeting roughly 8 to 10 million units.

At $1,999 (£1,580) for a 256GB model, the Ultra will cost roughly $800 (£591) more than the $1,199 (£886) iPhone 17 Pro Max. That Pro Max already includes Face ID, a telephoto camera, MagSafe, and a wider range of colour choices.

Source: International Business Times UK